Newburgh Priory, The Mount

Has been described as a Rejected Timber Castle (Motte)

There are earthwork remains

NameNewburgh Priory, The Mount
Alternative Names
Historic CountryYorkshire
Modern AuthorityNorth Yorkshire
1974 AuthorityNorth Yorkshire
Civil ParishOulston

A possible belvedere in the grounds of Newburgh Park, constructed after 1600. Field investigations in 1976 found it to be 30 metres in diameter, 2 metres high. It is completely hollowed out to accommodate what appears to be the cellar of a building. The cellar walls do not exceed the height of the mound, and access into it is provided by a sunken way cut through the north side. Two earthen ramps in the southeast quadrant lead onto the top of the mound. (PastScape)

(SE 5574 7507) "There is an antiquity here ... probably mediaeval and a cellar. It is approximately at this point on the map and your symbol may imply this site (referring to the apparent outline of a building on the OS 6" 1909-50). A mound surrounds it and it may have been originally 'the Mount'. It is, as it were, built into a tumulus and is now half filled with rubbish. The walling is ? dry stone, but there are quantities of plaster, etc. about, though these may be parts of the rubbish. (May possibly be a Castle Mound). (PastScape ref. Annotated Record Map–Corr 6" & MS notes (S V Morris 1953))

'The Mount' is an earthen mound approximately 30m diameter and externally 2m high. it is completely hollowed out to accommodate what appears to be the cellar of a building. The cellar walls do not exceed the height of the mound, and access into it is provided by a sunken way cut through the north side of the latter. Two earthen ramps in the SE quadrant lead onto the top of the mound. It is situated on the southern edge of Newburgh Priory Estate, and is probably the remains of a belevedere associated with the house, which dates as a private dwelling from the Dissolution. (PastScape ref

Field Investigators Comments–F1 RE 20-JUN-74)

Situation: The site lies within a commercial plantation (Mount Plantation), on a natural, oval hill top.

Preservation: If the site is indeed a motte it has been mutilated by conversion to a garden feature; otherwise it is a well-preserved post-medieval earthwork.

Description: The Mount is a circular mound with a base diameter of c. 30m, raised c. 2m above the surrounding ground surface, and characterised by two small earthen ramps adjoining to the south and east of the feature, which lead to its summit. A dry-stone, plastered building (possibly a cellar) is sunk into the mound, accessed from the north via a passage cut through it. Although it has been alleged that the mound is a small motte, it appears rather to be a post-medieval landscape garden feature on the edge of Newburgh Priory Estate. (Creighton 1998)

Gatehouse Comments

Isolated from modern settlement. On top of a prominent hill visible from Newburgh Priory. The suggestion this was a castle mound does not appear to have been made by someone with castle studies expertise. Clearly not a castle and rejected by Gatehouse.

- Philip Davis

Not scheduled

Not Listed

Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid ReferenceSE557750
Latitude54.1684112548828
Longitude-1.14769995212555
Eastings455740
Northings475070
HyperLink HyperLink HyperLink

No photos available. If you can provide pictures please contact Castlefacts

Most of the sites or buildings recorded in this web site are NOT open to the public and permission to visit a site must always be sought from the landowner or tenant.

Calculate Print

Other

  • Creighton, O.H., 1998, Castles and Landscapes: An Archaeological Survey of Yorkshire and the East Midlands (PhD Thesis University of Leicester) p. 67, 93, 613 online copy